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This page addresses LCOE -- the levelised cost of energy and the associated carrying charge rates. LCOE and carrying charge rates are evaluated with through demonstrating how to find data, how to measure and put together all of the factors that drive the carrying charge, and how to use carrying charge rates in economic analysis. For the electricity industry and other capital intensive industries different investment alternatives that have alternative operating lives, capital costs, variable costs, fixed costs and risks the LCOE can be an effective way effectively summarise different alternatives. More importantly, establishing carrying charge rates can make the analysis of different alternatives much more effective. The first lesson below walks through different components of the carrying charge that include evaluating project life, inflation, income taxes, deferred taxes, replacement capital costs, debt financing and maintaining a constant capital structure. The carrying charge converts a one-time cost (sometimes referred to as overnight cost) into an annual cost. In addition to carrying charges, comparing investments must evaluate the fixed and variable costs that for electricity include fuel cost. The second lesson set on this page describes how make various calculations that establish the fixed costs and the variable costs that are combined with the capital cost to establish the overall levelised cost.

This page will eventually include a variety of issues involving electricity analysis that includes among other things, coming up with appropriate incentives in different contracts (PPA, EPC, O&M etc) as well as selected issues surrounding distribution, transmission and generation. A subject that I have also include on the page is measuring the LCOE for power projects. As I have made a few videos on LCOE this is the first subject on the page.

Lesson Set 1: Carrying Charge Rates for Levelised Cost


This lesson set works through calculation of the carrying charges that are used for computing levelised cost of investment. You may think the carrying charge rate is some kind of esoteric concept that is not useful in your day to day work. If you go through this lesson set you will see that the finance, modelling and economic concepts in carrying charge rate analysis are closely related to both project finance and corporate finance.

The carrying charge is a percentage that converts a one time cost that is sometimes called the overnight cost into a level annual cost. (The level cost should be expressed in real terms (i.e. without inflation in constant currency). The lesson set involves using a single capital investment cost and evaluating each of the factors that drive the the conversion of the capital cost into an amount that must be recovered on an annual basis. You can think of this as the amount of revenues necessary to provide a given return to investors. After completing this lesson set I hope you will understand the following things about carrying charge rates:

1. Overview of why understanding carrying charges is important
2. Definition of Carrying Charge Rates -- Annual recovery cost to total cost; EBITDA to gross investment; Amount of annual recovery to carry investment
3. Normal Complications in Computing Carrying Charge Rates -- Construction Period, Inflation, Required Return on Equity, Tax Policies, Capital Structure
4. Addition Complications of Carrying Carrying Charge Rate -- Replacement Cost, Decommissioning and Deferred Taxes
5. Project Finance versus Traditional Approach to Computing Carrying Charge Rates
6. Necessity to Convert to Real (i.e. constant) Currency - Would Need to Compute Present value of the Inflated Fuel Cost using Nominal Currency
7. Tax Issues with Carrying Charges and the Concept that Recovery of Equity Returns can be Evalutated with the Formula: Recovery = Recovery + Recovery x t/(1-t)
8. Deferred Tax Complications whereby Recovery can be Computed through First Calculating the PV of the Tax Shield and then using this to Compute the Payment
9 Adjusting the Overnight Cost for Construction Periods with Both Inflation and Financing Cost. Note the Financing Cost must Include Equity and Debt
10. Evaluating the Effects of Future Replacement Cost that can Occur at Different Periods
11. Computing the Effects of Debt on the Analysis using a Constant Capital Structure.

There are a series of videos that describe each of the adjustments that you can make to derive the carrying charge. The video begins by describing the simple PMT

Videos associated with Lesson Set 1: Computing Carrying Charges


There are a series of videos that describe each of the adjustments that you can make to derive the carrying charge. The video begins by describing the simple PMT function that accounts for rate of return on investment and the asset life. Separate videos then move to inflation, tax, depreciation, construction periods, replacement cost and debt. The final video that includes all of the adjustments is explained below. Other videos that walk through each of the financial issues are listed at the bottom of the page. I hope you see how the videos describe many economic and technical aspects of project finance models and to some extent even corporate models. The videos also explain added features of the generic macros that modify colours, links, and sheet structure.



Carrying Charge Introduction

https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=z9s06nXh7U4
Carrying Charges and Inflation

https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=9uh8ZN_SHN4
Taxes in Carrying Charge Rates

https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=n3MWZvnleWg
Periodic Analysis in Carrying Charges

https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=zp06ubSxiGQ
Completed Carrying Charge Analysis

https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=ho2RnSHOWfk


Files associated with Lesson Set 1: Computing Carrying Charges


There are three files associated with this lesson set. The first file is the completed carrying charge analysis that you can use for economic analyses such as the analysis of batteries, solar and diesel. The second file includes all of the components of the carrying charge beginning with the PMT function and ultimately including effects of inflation, taxes, construction timing, replacement and debt. The third file includes exercises that you can work through in order There are a series of videos that describe each of the adjustments that you can make to derive the carrying charge. The video begins by describing the simple PMT function and moves to inflation, tax, depreciation, construction periods, replacement cost and debt.



Lesson Set 2: Levelised Cost of Electricity


The second lesson set addresses the issue of computing the levelised cost of electricity. There are a couple of basic things that you should know about LCOE. The first is what the word level means. It just means leveling out the price of electricity so as to get some kind of average. The problems with an average that spans prices over time is that it does not account for two things. The first is the time value of money. The second is the possibility that the amount of generation changes over time. The LCOE that is used in typical RFP's adjusts for these two factors. But it is still an average over time and it is still an average that is a nominal and not an inflation adjusted real number.

In this exercise, the LCOE is computed for different types of thermal power plants and for renewable energy. The fundamental notion is to add fixed and variable costs together and to express the up-front capital cost on an annual and then an hourly basis using the capacity or availability factor. Before you start, you need the following inputs as illustrated in the excerpt below:



These drivers are the central issue to any LCOE analysis and include (1) capital cost/kW (over night); (2) Fixed O&M cost per kW-year; (3) Variable O&M cost per MWH; (4) Capacity or availability factor; (5) Heat rate for dispatchable plants (MMBTU/MWH); (6) Fuel cost per MMBTU for dispatchable plants; and (7) Carrying Charge rate that converts capital costs into EBITDA that increases over time. The carrying charge rate is the most difficult to work through mechanically. The other factors can be derived from various sources ranging from Lazard LCOE reports to the cost analysis for Chinese coal plants in Pakistan to the using financial models and pvinsights for solar projects.



  • Convert the Cost per kW which is the crucial driver of power costs for many technologies by the carrying charge rate. This gives the cost per kW-year. The carrying charge can be thought of as the amount of annual EBITDA required for an amount of up-front cost. It can also be thought of as the return on and the return of capital to carry the investment. It can also be thought of like the loan payment on a house divided by the price of the house.

Annual Carrying Charges = Cost/kW x Carrying Charge Rate

  • Add the fixed O&M costs expressed in Amount (e.g. USD) per kW-year to the annual carrying charges to derive the total annual cost per kW-year.

Total Annual Fixed Cost/kW-year = Annual Carrying Charges + Fixed O&M Cost

  • Compute the total fixed cost based on energy rather than capacity. To do this, you need the capacity factor (for renewable) or the availability factor for base load (assuming the plant will run whenever it is available). The hours that must be covered by the fixed cost are 8766 x capacity factor. The total annual fixed cost per MWH as the annual cost x 1000 divided by 8766 x capacity factor.

Total Annual Fixed Cost/MWH = Total Fixed Cost/kW-year x 1000/ (8766 x CF)

  • Compute the fuel cost as the heat rate expressed in MMBTU/MWH with the Cost (e.g. USD/MMBTU) to derive the fuel cost per MWH.

Fuel Cost (USD/MWH) = Heat Rate (MMBTU/MWH) x Fuel Price (USD/MMBTU)

  • Add the variable O&M per MWH to the fuel cost to derive the total variable cost per MWH.

Variable Cost (USD/MWH) = Fuel Cost + Variable O&M

  • Add the total fixed cost to the variable cost to derive the levelized cost per MWH.

Levelised Cost/MWH = Total Fixed Cost/MWH + Total Variable Cost/MWH

Notes:

Treat the levelized cost analysis differently for a base load plant and an intermittent low capacity factor renewable energy plant.

For the base load plant measure the avoided cost of unavailable time.

For the intermittent plant with low capacity factor (e.g. solar and low capacity factor wind), measure the levelized cost relative to short-run avoided cost (should include the cost of ancillary services).

For the intermittent plant with a high capacity factor (e.g. off-shore wind and geothermal), could perform a loss of load probability analysis that credits the intermittent plant with some capacity value.


Note that the carrying charge formula is consistent with the formula:

LCOE = NPV(Revenues)/NPV(MWH) when degradation is accounted for in the carrying charges and the carrying charge formula includes inflation. This implies that the carrying charges are computed on a real and not nominal basis if all the fuel and O&M components are inflated on the same basis.


In explaining the general concept of LCOE I describe three general methods as follows:

Method 1: NPV(Revenue)/NPV(Generation)

I start with the formula that is sometimes included in RFP's which is:

LCOE = NPV(Nominal Revenue)/NPV(Generation)

This method is described in the videos and the files below (some of them have bad background noise, sorry about that).







I then explain that this formula is is the same as the formula for total cost where:

Total Cost = PV of O&M + PV of Capital Expenditure. In this case LCOE = Total Cost/NPV(Generation)

I demonstrate that this formula works only when the discount rate is equal to the PRE-TAX PROJECT IRR.

https://www.eia.gov/analysis/studies/powerplants/capitalcost/



Videos Associated with Lesson Set 2: LCOE Analysis


The file below illustrates how to use carrying charge rate analysis with different electricity technologies. It works through plants that are included in the IEA report as well as in the Lazard analysis and EIA website.




LCOE Exercise

LCOE Exercise.xlsm

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAnRC8uFrPk
Solar LCOE with Three Methods

Solar LCOE Model

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sh1w60T7cd4
Solar LCOE with Scenarios

Solar Version 3

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KPvCT_62Mcc






Files Associated with Lesson Set 1: LCOE Analysis






Lesson Set 3: Indexing and Purchasing Power Parity


This lesson works through calculation of the carrying charges that are used for computing levelised cost of investment. You may think the carrying charge rate is some


Subject

Excel File

Video Link

Chapter Reference

Page Reference











IPP Capacity Charges and Inflation

IPP Capacity Charges.xlsm

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nM1_vztq6x0

33

417

Tradeoff Between O&M and Availability

O&M and Availability.xlsm







LCOE Exercise

LCOE Exercise.xlsm







Evaluation of Bids Exercise

Bid Exercises.xlsm







Capacity Charge Bid Exercise

Capacity Charge Bid.xlsm







Heat Rate Risk and Availability Risk

Heat Rate and Avaiability.xlsm







Reading Exchange Rates and Inflation









Oftaker Costs and PPA Components









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Lesson Set 3: Indexing and Purchasing Power Parity

Lesson Set 4: Comparative Costs of Technologies and Acquiring Data


Cost Benchmarks and Miscellaneous Analyses
















Risk


Mechanics of how risk occurs
Mitigation from Mirror
Contract
Contract Examples
Theory
Exceptions/Discussion










Construction Delay Risk
LD penalty in PPA
EPC Contract
Delay LD in PPA Example Thermal'!A1
Should Reflect the off-taker costs
Limits on Delay in Unconventional Technology






Delay LD in PPA Renewable'!A1
Too high delay costs will increase EPC cost
Renewable should have lower cot to off-taker






Delay_in_EPC

Change orders in EPC contract



















Cost Over-run
Fixed Capacity
EPC Contract
Multi Part Tariff'!A1
Allocation to IPP increases cost
Bugangali Plant in Uganda




Payment or

One Part Tariff'!A1
Increase in cost higher for more complex
Real question is if tariff is affordable




Fixed One Part

EPC Contract Fixed Price'!A1

Change orders in EPC contract




Tariff at FC



History of EPC contractor and skin in game










Performance at COD
Reduced
EPC Contract
Performance LD in EPC'!A1
Stricter performance increases costs
Performance test period




Capacity Revenue



Measuring performance of wind generator




or Increased Cost



Measuring solar performance ratio




in case of heat rate























Availabilitity
Reduced Capacity
O&M Contract
Availability Penalty'!A1
High availability increase O&M cost
Nigeria fuel and transmission availability




Charges in Dispatch

O&M Contract'!A1
Can use spot market prices
Solar O&M and soiling




Reduced Energy in


Different penalties in different periods
Increased risk with spot prices




Renewable



Penalty structure in capacity charge










Fuel Price
Use Public Index
Fuel Supply
Contract Heat Rate'!A1
Risk only to the for the costs relative to market
TATA Power 4,000 MW Plant in India




or Actual Price
Agreement

Hedged risk in Merchant











Efficiency
Contract HR in PPA
O&M Contract
Contract Heat Rate'!A1

Fuel price measured against heat rate




One Part Tariff



IPP may pad HR and cause inefficiency








Renewable in energy production










Transmission Risk
Meter Location
PPA Contract


Curtailment risk in U.S. wind power




at Plant or Recipt























Resource Risk
Reduced Earned
None

Increases effective cost of renewable
Problems with wind resource studies




Revenue for
Higher DSCR


Hydro power variability




Renweable



Solar performance ratio evaluation










Exchange Rate Risk
Indexed capacity

Multi Part Tariff'!A1

Problems with PPP theory




and energy

One Part Tariff'!A1

Can make contract unaffordable




Indexed one part








tariff














Interest Rate Risk
No adj for interest
Interest Rate

Hedging ratio may be 60%
With variable inflation can have less




rate changes
Swap Agreement

hedging




Hedging depends



Swap agreement can be expensive




on DSCR














Political Risk

Political Risk

Judge political risk by evaluating
PRI may be difficult to collect





Insurance

economics from offtaker perspective and
Understand economics of project





Government

earned equity IRR






Gurantee













Demand and Supply Risk
Avoided in PPA
PPA


May be converted to political risk




Accepted in Merchant





















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Overview of Integrated Electricity Model.JPG

Project Finance in Integrated Model.JPG

Distribution Sensitivity.JPG

Scenario Analysis Part 1.JPG



Clean Up Models.JPG

Colouring Titles.JPG

Scenario Analysis Advanced.JPG


Corporate Model Debt.JPG


Macros 1.JPG
Select Sheet to Graph.JPG